HomeTrending MLB NewsCubs acquiring veteran reliever from Mariners

Cubs acquiring veteran reliever from Mariners

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The Cubs are acquiring reliever Tyson Miller from the Mariners for minor league infielderĀ Jake Slaughter, reports Jeff Passan of ESPN (X link). Seattle had designated Miller for assignment last week.

Miller returns to the organization that selected him in the fourth round of the 2016 draft. The Cal Baptist product reached the majors for a very brief stint during the 2020 season. The Cubs lost him on waivers to the Rangers the following year. That kicked off a nomadic stretch of his career that has seen Miller suit up for five teams without reaching even 15 innings for any of them.

The right-hander played for three teams last year. He bounced via waivers between the Brewers, Mets and Dodgers. Miller combined for 15 1/3 innings of eight-run ball and cleared waivers in September. He hit minor league free agency and inked a non-roster deal with Seattle going into 2024. The Mā€™s called him up two weeks into the regular season.

Miller had a productive month in the Pacific Northwest. He threw 11 2/3 frames over nine appearances, allowing four earned runs. Miller punched out 12 against one walk with a solid 12.6 percent swinging strike percentage. It was a little surprising that Seattle nevertheless took him off the roster, although heā€™d been in a low-leverage role in a solid bullpen.

The Cubs have a shakier relief corps than the Mariners do. Chicagoā€™s bullpen entered play Monday ranked 24th in the majors with a 4.58 earned run average. Their 23.4 percent strikeout rate is fine, but theyā€™ve issued walks at a huge 11 percent clip. Chicago also has five relievers on the injured list at present. Yency AlmonteĀ landed on the shelf over the weekend, while Adbert AlzolayĀ just went down with a forearm strainĀ this evening.

Miller is out of options, so heā€™ll step right into the major league bullpen. The Cubs need to create a 40-man roster spot to finalize his acquisition and will need to make an active roster move once he reports to the team.

In return for a middle reliever who had been squeezed off the depth chart, Seattle adds an upper minors infielder who is out to a strong start. Slaughter, 27, has a .297/.392/.486 slash line over 130 plate appearances for Chicagoā€™s top affiliate in Iowa. He has connected on five homers, stolen 10 bases in 11 tries, and drawn walks at a strong 11.5 percent clip. His 24.6 percent strikeout rate is slightly higher than average but around three percentage points lower than last yearā€™s 27.5 percent mark.

Slaughter was an 18th-round pick out of LSU back in 2018. He has never drawn much prospect fanfare and has gone unselected in the Rule 5 draft twice. His numbers this season are strong enough that he has a chance to reach the majors in a reserve capacity this year, though. He would qualify for minor league free agency at the start of next offseason if Seattle doesnā€™t add him to the 40-man roster before then.

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